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121 The Gospel of Health March 1, 1898, paragraph 6
… from alcohol with a tobacco pipe in his own mouth.”
122 The Health Reformer September 1, 1871, paragraph 4
… tobacco, alcohol, coffee, tea, flesh-food, salt, &C., &C. But let one accustomed to a hygienic dietary cease to use one or more of the articles to which he is habituated …
123 The Health Reformer November 1, 1871, paragraph 22
Alcohol and tobacco pollute the blood of men, and thousands of lives are yearly sacrificed to these poisons. Confinement indoors, shut away from the glorious …
124 The Health Reformer August 1, 1875, paragraph 9
… , and alcoholic drinks. There is double necessity for the men of this generation to call to their aid the power of the will, strengthened by the grace of God, in …
125 Good Health November 1, 1882, paragraph 7
… , tobacco, alcohol, and morphine. These indulgences may well be classed among the lusts that exert a pernicious influence upon moral character.
126 The Medical Evangelist January 1, 1910, paragraph 15
… used. Alcohol or tobacco in any form must not be recommended, lest some soul be led to imbibe a taste for those evil things. There will be no excuse for the liquor …
127 Pacific Union Recorder March 23, 1905, Art. A, paragraph 2
… of alcohol and tobacco in every form. Our physicians are to go to the root of the matter, showing that sickness and suffering do not come from God, but are the …
128 The Review and Herald October 31, 1871, paragraph 23
Alcohol and tobacco pollute the blood of men, and thousands of lives are yearly sacrificed to these poisons. Confinement indoors, shut away from the glorious …
129 The Review and Herald March 18, 1875, paragraph 3
… Heaven. Alcohol and tobacco inebriates would, at times, give any amount of money if they could by so doing overcome their appetite for these body-and-soul-destroying …
130 The Review and Herald March 18, 1875, paragraph 14
… , for alcohol, or tobacco, they are sold. And while paralyzed by the indulgence of appetite, Satan controls the mind, and leads to every species of crime and wickedness …
131 The Review and Herald January 25, 1881, paragraph 24
… , tobacco, alcohol, and morphine. These indulgences may well be classed among the lusts that exert a pernicious influence upon moral character. The earlier …
132 The Review and Herald November 8, 1881, paragraph 13
… of alcohol are more numerous today than at any former period. The politicians’ plan of licensing “for the public good” has proved itself a curse.
133 The Review and Herald March 25, 1884, Art. A, paragraph 7
… of alcohol added, and concluded by calling for “a good dose of black pepper.” The man who was preparing it asked, “What will you do with such a mixture? He replied …
134 The Review and Herald February 10, 1885, paragraph 9
… of alcohol. The watchword at the portals of this institution is total abstinence from alcohol in every form. There are no alcoholic tinctures in medicines …
135 The Review and Herald February 10, 1885, paragraph 10
… that alcoholism undermines, weakens, and destroys the moral character in man; that a proper sense of obligation, a regard for the calls of duty, and compliance …
136 The Review and Herald February 10, 1885, paragraph 11
“Alcoholism seems to affect all classes of society. During the past year the Home has had among its inmates nineteen physicians, eighteen lawyers, seven clergymen, besides bankers, editors, merchants, mechanics, artists, and laborers.”
137 The Review and Herald October 19, 1886, paragraph 5
… , no alcoholic liquor of any kind was allowed to be sold there. Nothing stronger than soda water was dealt out to visitors.
138 The Review and Herald May 1, 1894, paragraph 11
… poisonous alcoholic drinks to his neighbors. Not every man who engages in the liquor business is ignorant of the numberless ways in which it results in degradation …
139 The Review and Herald July 4, 1899, paragraph 1
… for alcoholic drinks, and tobacco, which is a slow but sure and deadly poison, weakening the nervous system, and debasing the noble faculties of the mind. If …
140 The Review and Herald July 3, 1900, Art. A, paragraph 12
… of alcohol, but this elation is followed by a corresponding depression, and by sluggish movements of the brain. His years of taxing study are lost, for he has …